Set control rules first
- The agent can control the companion, environment, and side characters.
- The user controls their own actions, speech, feelings, and consent.
- Replies should end with a hook, choice, question, or visible action.
- Long-running scenes need compact recaps so memory does not collapse.
Use intensity controls
- Increase or decrease intensity by degree instead of rewriting the whole premise.
- Ask for slower pacing, warmer tone, more direct dialogue, or less description.
- If a boundary appears, redirect toward an approved alternative.
- A reset phrase can return the scene to flirting, banter, or planning mode.
Repair without killing the scene
- Ask for one rewrite that fixes the problem and continues from the same moment.
- Avoid repeated scolding; it often makes the model more apologetic and less useful.
- Tell the companion to acknowledge the correction once and continue in character.
- Save corrected rules into the current scene brief.
Copy-ready prompts
Roleplay contract: you control the companion, side characters, and environment. I control my character. Do not write my actions, speech, feelings, or consent. Keep replies under 180 words and end with one clear hook.
Lower the intensity by 30 percent and keep the same attraction. Continue with slower pacing, clearer consent, and one warm in-character action.
Rewrite your last reply to respect this boundary: [boundary]. Acknowledge the correction once, preserve the scene tone, and continue without taking control of my character.